"Carteles Cubanos" represents a landmark publication documenting Cuba's extraordinary poster art tradition that flourished in the decades following the Revolution. The cover features a dramatic high-contrast composition showing multiple revolutionary faces in vibrant orange against black, with the iconic phrase "HASTA LA VICTORIA SIEMPRE" (Until Victory Always)—forever associated with Che Guevara—emblazoned across the center. This bold screenprint aesthetic, with its limited color palette and powerful silhouettes punctuated by small red stars, exemplifies the visual language of Cuban revolutionary graphics that combined modernist design principles with militant political messaging.
Published by Editorial Letras Cubanas with parallel introductions in English, French, German, and Russian, this comprehensive volume was explicitly designed for international circulation, positioning Cuban poster art within global revolutionary movements. The multilingual text explains how Cuban posters rejected both capitalist advertising conventions and Soviet socialist realist aesthetics, instead pioneering a distinctive approach that synthesized international avant-garde traditions with Latin American and Afro-Cuban visual culture. The introduction documents how institutions like OSPAAL (Organization of Solidarity with the People of Africa, Asia and Latin America) and ICAIC (Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Art and Industry) became major production centers, creating what the text describes as "a veritable treasure house of themes and events" that achieved "considerable technical level" and "extraordinary graphic quality." "Carteles Cubanos" codified Cuba's achievement as a model for revolutionary visual communication that influenced solidarity movements and progressive graphic design worldwide.